Global Stocks

Oil rises, global stocks slip as US-Iran tensions flare again – Business & Economy

Oil prices were higher on Friday, and stocks were a little lower as the US and Iran exchanged fire in the Middle East, though many Asian markets were still heading for stellar weekly gains as AI demand has swept up chipmakers.

Benchmark Brent crude futures were up 1.3% at $101.60 a barrel, and European stock futures fell 0.7%.

The United States and Iran exchanged fire on Thursday in the most serious test yet of their month-long ceasefire, but Iran said the situation had returned to normal while the U.S. said it did not want to ​escalate.

President Donald Trump said the ceasefire, which has more or less held for a month, was still in effect, sustaining ​hopes for a negotiated resolution.

Stock markets in Asia, which have been soaring thanks to gains in chipmakers and ⁠other AI-linked stocks, slipped only slightly from record highs.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asian shares outside Japan fell 0.8%, as did South Korea’s ​KOSPI, though the latter was still headed for a weekly gain of more than 12% – the largest since 2008 – as Samsung and SK Hynix have surged.

Taiwan’s ​benchmark is up 6.9% this week, and Japan’s Nikkei 4.5%.

“Despite ongoing hostilities and still-elevated oil prices, markets are pricing a limited duration,” said Marija Veitmane, head of equity research at State Street Markets, with Asia and the US attracting the most buying at Europe’s expense.

The Nikkei was 0.4% lower through Friday morning, dragged by ​a fall in SoftBank shares after Arm Holdings, where it is the majority owner, warned of trouble securing supply for its new artificial intelligence chip.

S&P ​500 futures rose 0.2%.

Currency markets were broadly steady with the dollar recovering from recent lows and the yen in focus as Japan has likely been intervening ‌to ⁠stave off further falls.

The euro bought $1.1731, the Aussie $0.7210 and the yen was at 156.9 per dollar, having struggled to sustain gains beyond 155 after surges on suspected intervention to the tune of nearly $70 billion since last Thursday.

China’s yuan , Asia’s best-performing currency since the war broke out, is on the cusp of strengthening past 6.8 to the dollar and sits near its strongest since 2023.

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